You are here |
solarpunkanarchists.com | ||
| | | |
berlinergazette.de
|
|
| | | | In times when capitalism claims its monopoly on both dystopia (such as apocalyptic theme parks) and utopia (such as green smart cities), it is difficult to draw emancipatory ideas from dystopian or utopian narratives. The solarpunk genre, with its hopeful post-apocalyptic visions, seems to offer alternatives to this dilemma. But is it really the best of both worlds? Or rather the worst? Alessandro Sbordoni takes stock. | |
| | | |
loriemerson.net
|
|
| | | | What follows is the draft introduction I have written for an essay I'm working on ("How to Activate the Potential of Imaginary Networks") that is the result of my initial work cataloging a handful of imaginary networks for Other Networks: A Radical Technology Sourcebook (Anthology Editions, forthcoming April 2025). *** Imaginationcreates the situation,and, then, the... | |
| | | |
www.lazaruscorporation.co.uk
|
|
| | | | Back in the 1970s there seemed to be such a myriad of ideas about potential shared futures, exploring all aspects of the political, social, and cultural. The aim of neoliberal capitalism of the 1980s onwards... | |
| | | |
www.woodmac.com
|
|
| | Market insights, webinars, whitepapers and events on Wood Mackenzie's platforms. |